I just signed up with Backpackit, and while setting up my pages I got goose bumps.
I had done this before. No, not at this site. At another one. There are to do lists and organizational tools there as well. I can remember putting some stuff on a to do list. I can remember thinking that it could one day become a very helpful setup for me.
Now I can't find it. It's orphaned, a free account on some random helpful web site somewhere.
Anyone know of web sites like that? Heck, how about good Google search terms?
edit: FOUND IT!!! Remember the Milk.
I had done this before. No, not at this site. At another one. There are to do lists and organizational tools there as well. I can remember putting some stuff on a to do list. I can remember thinking that it could one day become a very helpful setup for me.
Now I can't find it. It's orphaned, a free account on some random helpful web site somewhere.
Anyone know of web sites like that? Heck, how about good Google search terms?
edit: FOUND IT!!! Remember the Milk.
no subject
If you really don't want to deal with a whole chicken carcass (which I can understand) try buying chicken thighs instead. bonus: the skin comes off really, really easily.
no subject
no subject
As I think klwalton mentioned in a previous cooking thread, what makes for tender meat is the connective fibers (collagen) melting in the cooking process. White meat (breasts) just don't have any of that stuff handy, so they prefer being cooked for a really short amount of time. Not ideal crockpot territory.
Here's another simple, good one:
get a boneless beef chuck roast (2-3lbs). Peel and slice 4 onions (I run them through a food processor). Put onions in crockpot, then a few slices of bacon, then the roast. Stick 5 whole cloves into the top of the roast (in the fatty bits for better flavor conduction). Put a few more slices of bacon on top. Cook and enjoy. (The broth produced comes out like the best french onion soup you have EVER had.)
no subject
oooo! That one looks scrumptious. No liquids added? Just the juices from the meat and the bacon?
no subject
Reading the original reminds me that I forgot to tell you to salt and pepper the beast before it goes in. If you're used to lightly salting (or not at all) your food in restaurants, you may need encouragement to be as liberal with the salt as you will need to be. Remember that you're salting 2+lbs of meat plus a lot of onion, not just sprinkling a bit meekly on top. :-)
*nod* to the dark meat question. Pork also crockpots nicely, but again the trick is to choose the tougher/fattier cuts (try pork shoulder or pork butt), as opposed to (eg) expensive and nearly fat-free pork loin, which will just dry out in the crockpot.
no subject
Darn, and here I was thinking a crock pot would allow me to do most any recipe more slowly. *big drama-filled sigh* Poor me.
OK, what herbs would you add to stew beef? That's my next experiment (aka the only meat I have left in the freezer to try).
no subject
or, here's a likely looking recipe from a random web site, and afterwards, how I would modify it for a crockpot:
Helen's Stout Stew
2 lbs stewing beef (1" cubes)
1 large onion, minced
5-6 carrots cut in 1" cubes
4-5 medium potatoes, quartered
salt, pepper, oregano, thyme to taste
6 oz. stout or dark beer
2 cans beef broth
(or 3 cups homemade beef broth)
In a fry pan or Dutch oven, gently brown stew beef in a little oil. Add onions and continue to cook 2-3 minutes more until they are slightly cooked. Add broth, spices, and stout. Bring to a boil then put in 350° oven to cook for about 1 hour. Add carrots and potatoes and cook for another 30-45 minutes until vegetables and meat pieces are tender.
I would follow the instructions through cooking the onions, then dump the contents of the pan into the crockpot along with the rest of the ingredients.
a note on browning meat: it took me way, way too long to learn that "brown" doesn't mean "cook until it turns gray on the surface, that's long enough". Brown really does mean brown, and it develops the flavor in ways that your crockpot can't. For extra geekiness, google "Maillard reaction" and enjoy. :-)
oregano and thyme "to taste". For 2 lbs of each, try a (measuring!) teaspoon of oregano, and half a teaspoon of thyme. Rosemary is also good with beef.
Obviously, you can skip the beer if it's not something you have lying around the house...
no subject
Er, make that 2 lbs of MEAT. Too much studying is bad for the brain.
no subject
no subject
no subject